
The U.S. tax system disproportionately favors the ultra-wealthy by allowing them to avoid taxable income through low salaries and the strategic use of unrealized capital gains. Ray Madoff, a professor at Boston College Law School, explains that billionaires like Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk fund lavish lifestyles by borrowing against their stock holdings rather than selling them, thereby avoiding income and capital gains taxes entirely. Furthermore, the estate tax—intended to prevent dynastic wealth—has been rendered ineffective by loopholes such as dynasty trusts and the "angel of death" step-up in basis, which wipes away tax liability on appreciated assets at death. Addressing these systemic inequities requires eliminating the distinction between capital gains and ordinary income, taxing gains at the time of transfer, and closing loopholes that allow inherited wealth to pass through generations tax-free.
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